J. Am. Chem. Soc. 1987, 109, 2358-2368
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Spontaneously Organized Molecular Assemblies. 3. Preparation and Properties of Solution Adsorbed Monolayers of Organic Disulfides on Gold Surfaces Ralph G. Nuzzo,*+ Florence A. F U S C Oand , ~ ~David ~ L. Allara*l Contribution from AT&T Bell Laboratories, Murray Hill, New Jersey 07974, and Bell Communications Research, Red Bank, New Jersey 07701. Received July 18, 1986
Abstract: This paper shows that stable, oriented, polyfunctional organic monolayers can be prepared by the spontaneous organization of structurally complex organic disulfides on polycrystalline gold substrates. Chemisorption proceeds to very high coverages, approaching that equivalent to the bulk-phase densities of the adsorbate molecules. The bonding to the surface is also highly specific, inasmuch as the chemisorption of the disulfide moiety is favored greatly over a wide range of other functionality. This latter feature allows the ready preparation of a broad variety of organic surfaces with well-defined microscopic and macroscopic characteristics. Several representative examples of monolayer films are described, their chemical and thermal properties explored, and their structures characterized by several techniques including infrared and photoelectron spectroscopies.
Interest in the properties of thin film organic materials, especially as regards organized mono- and multilayer structures prepared by Langmuir-Blodgett and self-assembly techniques, has grown enormously in recent years. The technological impetus for this rebirth-the relevance of such structures and materials to adhesion,' lubricatioq2 microelectronic^,^ photochemical4 and electrochemical5 processes, as well as biological interfaces6 -has been discussed extensively and is now well appreciated. Equally important and, as yet, little discussed is the more basic contribution such studies might make to our understanding of the chemistry and physics of surfaces and interfaces in general. For example, t o relate even a nominally simple macroscopic property such as wetting to a precise microscopic structure (or even to go in the opposite direction) is enormously difficult a t present.' More involved interfacial properties and processes are characterized by a correspondingly increased level of complexity. As a consequence, progress in these areas will require interdisciplinary approaches involving the development a n d integration of such specialties as theory, synthesis, and materials characterization especially as they relate to surfaces and interfaces. In this current paper we describe our results on the chemisorption of organic disulfides on elemental gold surfaces*and detail t h e application of reflection infrared and X-ray photoelectron spectroscopies, as well as ellipsometry and physical property measurements t o the study of structure, reactivity, and surface bonding in this chemisorption system. Further, we detail a seemingly useful and general application of this class of chemisorption reaction, namely, the orientation of polar organic functionality a t an ambient interface via self-assembly. T h e utility of these unusual monolayer structures to serve a s substrates in more elaborate physical studies is demonstrated with representative examples.
Experimental Section Sample Preparation and Treatment. Samples for the majority of the experiments performed were made by the vapor deposition of gold (both >99.999% and 99.99% purity materials) from resistively heated tungsten boats onto clean silicon single crystals which had been polished to high optical quality (see below). The substrate temperature was near but slightly above ambient temperature during the deposition. All depositions were made in a modified Varian evaporator equipped with a cyro-pump and operating with a base pressure of 1 X lo-* torr. Film thicknesses were measured with a quartz crystal thickness monitor. Typical mass coverages of -2000 8, of gold were used. For most experiments strong adhesion of the gold film to the single cr stal substrate was required. To promote adhesion, a preflash of 150 of chromium was used. After the deposition, the chamber was backfilled with research purity N,; the
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'Bell Laboratories. Current Address: Department of Material Science and Engineering, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, MA 021 39. Bell Communications Research. 0002-7863 /87/1509-2358$01.50/0 , I
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samples were removed and subjected to chemical treatment or spectroscopic examination with minimal delay. Most experimental results were quite reproducible with longer delay times up to the point of several days for samples in closed containers or several hours for samples exposed to the laboratory ambient. We did observe a significant tendency for the samples to become irreversibly contaminated under these latter conditions, however, and, as such, it is not recommended. Solution treatments normally consisted of the direct immersion of the gold substrates into solutions (concentrations in the range 0.01 to 0.001 M) of the given disulfide in an appropriate high-purity solvent at ambient temperature. Immersion times were varied from several minutes to several days; in general, immersion times of several hours appeared to give results comparable to those obtained with longer incubations for most of the absorbates examined. We note that adventitious contaminants on the gold substrates may negate these observations. After immersion, the samples were rinsed with solvent and spun dry on a Headway photoresist spinner. Fresh disulfide solutions were made regularly as these materials appeared to be reasonably sensitive to decomposition (oxidation) in dilute solution. Additionally, best results were always obtained using polypropylene or Teflon containers rather than glass for the incubations. Infrared Measurements. IR spectra of adsorbates were taken by reflection of the incident beam at an angle of incidence of 8 6 O (4O off glancing) using p-polarized radiation. A nitrogen-purged Digilab 15-B Fourier transform spectrometer was used in conjunction with modified optics, which permit focusing of the beam outside the instrument, and equipped with stops and apertures to give an f/15 beam focusing to an -3-mm spot. A liquid-nitrogen-cooled mercury-cadmium-telluride (MCT) detector, operated in the photovoltaic mode, was used. Spectra were taken at 2-cm-I resolution with a mirror speed of 1.4 cm/s. The interferograms were collected in double precision and Fourier transformed using triangular apodization. Typically, 800 scans were averaged to yield spectra with acceptable signal-to-noise ratios. Reference spectra were obtained on freshly evaporated gold mirrors. The procedures used to check and clean these reference substrates, when necessary, have been described previ~usly.~ Spectra of bulk compounds dispersed in KBr were obtained in transmission at normal incidence. All such samples were prepared and manipulated under an atmosphere of dry, research purity nitrogen.
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(1) Kaelble, D.H.Physical Chemistry of Adhesion; Wiley-Interscience: New York, 1971,and references cited therein. (2) Bowden, F. P.;Tabor, D. The Friction and Lubrication of Solids; Oxford University Press: London, 1968,and references cited therein. (3) Roberts, G . G. Adu. Phys. 1985,34,475-512. (4)Whitten, D. G. Angew. Chem., Int. Ed. Engl. 1979, 18, 440-450. (5) See, for example: Faulkner, L. R. Chem. Eng. News 1984, 28-45. Murray, R. W. In Electroanalytical Chemistry; Bard, A. J., Ed.; Marcel Dekker: New York, 1984;Vol. 13 and references cited therein. (6) See, for example: Waldbillig, R. C.; Robertson, J. D.; McIntosh, T. J. Biochim. Biophys. Acta 1976, 448, 1-14, 15-28. Kornberg, R. D.; McConnell, H. M. Biochemistry 1971, 10, 1 1 11-1 1 1 8 and references cited therein. (7) Holmes-Farley, S. R.; Reamey, R. H.; McCarthy, T. J.; Deutch, J.; Whitesides,G. M. Langmuir 1985,1, 725-740. Schwartz, L. W.; Garoff, S.
Ibid. 1985, 1, 219-230. (8)Nuzzo, R.G.; Allara, D. L. J . Am. Chem. Soc. 1983,105,4481-4483. (9)Allara, D. L.; Nuzzo, R. G. Langmuir 1985, 1, 52-66.
0 1987 American Chemical Society
J . Am. Chem. SOC.,Vol. 109, No. 8, 1987 2359
Monolayers of Organic Disulfides on Gold Surfaces Reflection infrared measurements made at higher temperatures were carried out by mounting samples, prepared as described above except using quartz as the initial substrate, on a copper support block. The assembly was resistively heated using a nichrome wire strip heater placed against the back of the copper block. The temperature was monitored with a thermocouple placed in a hole in the side of the quartz substrate and controlled to 11 OC using a Leeds-Northrup temperature controller. X-ray Photoelectron Spectroscopy. A modified Kratos XSAM 800 photoemission spectrometer utilizing a hemispherical analyzer and operating in a fixed analyzer transmission mode was employed for data acquisition. The instrumental resolution was -1.1 eV, using a 2-mm mechanical aperture in conjunction with a Mg Ka X-ray source. Digital data were acquired by using 0.05-V steps. The base operating pressure was